Daily, weekly and deep-clean routines — plus the lid and gasket spots most people miss.
The short answer: rinse your bottle with hot water daily, deep-clean it weekly with a bottle brush and either baking soda or white vinegar, and always take the lid apart to clean the rubber gasket — that hidden seal is where smell and mould start, not the bottle body. Air-dry it upside down so moisture doesn't sit inside.
That covers 90% of it. Here is the full routine, why each step matters, and how to rescue a bottle that already smells.
After each use, empty the bottle, rinse with hot water and leave it open to dry. Coffee, juice, protein and sugary drinks leave a film that feeds bacteria, so don't let them sit overnight. If you only drink water, a hot rinse is genuinely enough day to day.
When a bottle starts to smell or shows brown tea/coffee staining, do a soak:
Never use bleach or harsh chlorine inside an insulated bottle — it can pit the steel over time. And skip steel wool, which scratches the interior and gives bacteria more surface to cling to.
If you are choosing a bottle (or a product to sell), a food-grade inner ceramic coating makes all of this easier: the smooth, non-porous surface resists coffee and tea staining and rinses clean, with far less of the biofilm that causes odour in bare steel. It is the single biggest "easy-clean" upgrade in an insulated bottle.
Sourcing drinkware? Talk to Beyond at Jupeng — a real factory since 1998, factory-direct pricing, FDA/LFGB/EU/Prop 65 certs ready, MOQ from 500 pcs, 30-day production. We usually reply within 24 hours.
Written by the Jupeng Drinkware team — Yongkang, Zhejiang, China. Manufacturing drinkware since 1998. Contact Beyond: info@jupengcup.com | WhatsApp +86 156 5791 8881